Late-Life Fitness Gains Explain the Absence of a Selection Shadow in Ants

2021 
A key hypothesis for the occurrence of senescence is a decrease in the selection strength because of low late-life fitness - the so-called selection shadow. However, in social insects, aging is considered a plastic trait and senescence seems to be absent. By life-long tracking of 102 ant colonies, we find that queens increase the production of sexuals in late life regardless of their absolute lifespan or worker investment. This indicates a genetically accommodated adaptive shift towards increasingly queen-biased caste ratios over the course of a queens life. Furthermore, mortality decreased with age, supporting the hypothesis that aging is adaptive. We argue that selection for late life reproduction diminishes the selection shadow of old age and leads to the apparent absence of senescence in ants, in contrast to most iteroparous species.
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